(organic chemistry) An aromatic bicyclic ion or salt containing a benzene ring fused to a pyrylium ion
benzoxycamphor
benzoylformic
benzylamine
benzylamine
noun
(organic chemistry) The aromatic primary amine C₆H₅-CH₂-NH₂ or its derivatives
brombenzyl
bromobenzyl
bromobenzyl
noun
(organic chemistry, especially in plural) Any bromo derivative of a benzyl radical
byzantinism
byzantium
byzantium
Noun
A dark shade of purple, close to Tyrian purple and palatinate purple
Proper noun
The ancient Greek city situated on the Bosporus, named Constantinople in 330 and now known as Istanbul.
The Byzantine Empire.
dimethylbenzene
dimethylbenzene
noun
(organic chemistry) xylene
emblazonry
emblazonry
noun
Something emblazoned; a heraldic pattern.
flamboyantize
magnetizability
magnetizability
noun
(countable, physics) A measure of the extent to which something is magnetizable; specifically the tensor quantity relating the induced magnetic moment to the applied magnetic flux density
(uncountable) The state of being magnetizable
methoxybenzene
methoxybenzene
noun
(organic chemistry) The methyl ether derived from phenol; it is used in perfumery and is an insect pheromone
methylbenzene
methylbenzene
noun
(organic chemistry) Synonym of toluene
methyltrinitrobenzene
monosyllabize
monosyllabize
verb
To make monosyllabic.
phenoxybenzamine
phenoxybenzamine
noun
(pharmacology) A drug that blocks the activity of alpha-receptors and is used in the form of its hydrochloride C₁₈H₂₂ClNO·HCl especially to treat hypertension and sweating due to pheochromocytoma.
pyribenzamine
resymbolization
resymbolizing
semihydrobenzoinic
symbolization
symbolization
noun
(psychology) The unconscious mental representation of one thing by another.
The act of symbolizing; the use of symbols to represent things, or the investing of things with a symbolic meaning.
symbolizations
symbolizations
noun
plural of symbolization
symbolizing
symbolizing
noun
A symbolic conception.
verb
present participle of symbolize
trimethylbenzene
trimethylbenzene
noun
(chemistry) Any of three isomeric chemical compounds: 1,2,3-trimethylbenzene, 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene (pseudocumene), and 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene (mesitylene).